Schoolboy Malcolm Ladd was a lorry enthusiast in the 1950s, when he began building a lorry photo archive. Here are some of his favourites.
I’m now 71 but, as a boy growing up in the 1950s and ‘60s, I travelled regularly during school holidays in the cab with my Uncle, who drove for Guymers Transport of Aldridge, near Walsall. I then had the idea of writing to transport firms to see if they had any photographs I could have. I got a good response, and still have 70-odd images in my historic lorry photo archive.
Lorry-driving was always what I wanted to do and, eventually, I was able to fulfil that dream. First, though, I joined Royal Mail in 1964, as a telegram boy, and then, at the age of 21, moved on to the small delivery vans. I gained my Class 1 in 1988, and night-trunked until I retired in 2018, giving me 54 years’ service in a job that I loved.
The firms that responded to a schoolboy’s request for photographs included Alfred Dexter of Liverpool, GD James and Wrekin Roadways of Wellington, Shropshire, Cawthorn & Sinclair of Birtley, Co. Durham, Bulk Liquid of Leeds, Capels of Coventry, Pitt & Scott of London, WT Flather (Steel Stockholders) of Sheffield, Hunters of Hull, Leonard J Stamp of Bristol, Midland Road Tank Services of Walsall, R Rankin of Newcastle upon Tyne, Edward Beck of Stockport, James Hemphill of Glasgow, Harris Road Services of Northwich, Thomas Allen of Stanford-le-Hope in Essex, Ross Garages of Cardiff, AS Jones of Liverpool, Fred Snaylam of Bolton, Davies & Brown of St Helens, Williams Bros of Denbigh, North Wales, and FG Marquand of Callington, Cornwall.
I’ve provided a selection of those images I received, and hope you will find them of interest.
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